Mourning Glory eBook Warren Adler


From the bestselling author of 'The War of the Roses' - Desperate times call for desperate measures for Grace Sorentino in this witty story about navigating single motherhood in one of America's wealthiest towns. Now currently in development as a film.
A down on her luck 38-year-old single mother with a dysfunctional teenage daughter snares a rich widower in Palm Beach. But her cynical scheme unravels and she finds herself enmeshed in a self-spun web of deception and danger that threatens to rob her of everything she holds dear.
Mourning Glory eBook Warren Adler
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Mourning Glory eBook Warren Adler Reviews
Looking for a light yet tasty summer read? Then look no further than Warren Adler's new novel, "Mourning Glory." It has all the right ingredients for a delicious way to pass a few hours. The basic plot concerns a middle-aged and attractive woman Grace Sorentino, a resident of Palm Beach, Florida, and her adventures. After being fired from Saks, she hatches a crazy plot to snare a rich husband. By going to the funerals of recently deceased women and cozying up to the new widowers! The novel really gets going and gets really good when Grace has to deal with the consequences of her actions. She didn't factor falling in love with her prey into her gold-digging equation! What works about this novel is that the people are very real and very finely drawn by Mr. Adler. Grace has flaws. Her daughter has flaws. Sam her "prey" has flaws. And Adler has a way of making you want to turn the pages as quickly as possible, to find out the next zany plot twist. If you're tired of the same old Oprah's book club recommendation, I suggest you give "Mourning Glory" by Warren Adler a look. It'll be worth your time and money!
Versace, de la Renta, Givenchy. The great designers are the gods of a better life in the world of Grace Sorentino and her daughter Jackie. But as a divorced beautician with an out-of-control teenage child, how do you get there?
By marrying up, the manager of Saks Fifth Avenue's Miami store says to Grace as she fires her at the request of a high-paying customer with unreasonable expectations. Ring around the finger. Snare a wealthy widower, preferably a Jewish one.
Desperately, Grace follows her advice. Against all the odds, she hooks Sam Goodwin, a very wealthy transplanted businessman from Brooklyn, at the funeral of his socialite wife. Posing as a friend of the deceased, Grace offers to collect her clothing and donate it to charities. Along with the clothes, she collects Sam's interest, which spirals into love.
Also desperately, Jackie has fallen for Darryl, a skinhead who is filling her with greed, bigotry, and disrespect for her mother. Believing she is entitled to the trappings of wealth, she will do anything for money theft, prostitution, and blackmail.
Grace is just about to land Sam when disaster strikes. Does Grace have the strength to see herself through the ultimate catastrophe and conquer wealth, power, and love?
The reader cheers on Grace as she struggles with her self-respect and integrity throughout the book. Is she any better than a gold digger? Can she instill in Jackie compassion and decency? She keeps asking herself these questions, and tries to answer yes. Grace confronts the obstacles to her goals in a surprising climax, in which the reader feels her release her pent-up frustration with her life and try to untangle herself from her web of intrigue and deceit. One may wish she would lose her passivity earlier in the book, but it adds to the power of the ending.
This book makes me want to go to Florida! I've been having a lot of problems meeting men in my home town, and it seems like Grace and her daughter have no trouble in the men department (well, after a few glitches!). It would also be nice to be some place warmer! Anyway, I really enjoyed this book. Grace is such a cool person! She really takes her life into her own hands and makes everything better for her and her daughter. I wish my mom were more like that. I want to be someone who is happy in her job all of the time. Life is too short to be unhappy, and you can see that moral with Sam and how he handles his life after his wife dies! I just wish that Grace was more understanding of her daughter's boyfriend. He wasn't that bad in the beginning, they just met the wrong way. And I don't think that she would have stayed with him anyway.
"Potential" is a dangerous word; after the fact, its most common unstated implication is "unfulfilled." So, too, with MOURNING GLORY. From the title through the final page, this novel had the potential to be terrific.
Like the title, the underlying premise of the story is clever. MOURNING GLORY tells of the quest of a down-on-her-luck divorcee who decides that she will find husband number two by haunting the funeral parlors of a wealthy town. She hopes that she will be able to focus in on a heartbroken widower desperate for the attention of a good woman before the other predatory women of the community can get to him.
This story should have been great, it should have been funny. As it was, the novel only is distasteful. While there's nothing wrong with Mr. Adler's writing, it was odd to see a book with a 2001 pub date mention Bonwit Teller's, a New York based department store that has been out of business for about twenty years. Where was his editor? Also, "garter belts" are consistently referred to as "suspenders," and a sex toy consistently is called by a technical term that women do not use.
The sole compliment that I can find for MOURNING GLORY is that, for a change, the heroine is not just some young girl with firm breasts whose worst problem is a broken fingernail. It would have been nice if the author could have offered a more thorough description of Palm Beach, where he places this novel, and which is a unique and interesting town.
Finally, the sex scenes just...lie there. To compound the problem, the sex is pretty repetitive as well. Virtually any of the female romance writers do better with these episodes. Anyone who wants to read a juicy romance should buy something by Susan Elizabeth Phillips, Nora Roberts, Elizabeth Lowell, Rachel Gibson, Jane Graves. There is a vast group of authors who do a superior job with this type of story.
Great story, excellent service. Thanks

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